Thursday, June 28th, 2007
Languages of the world. With a cool language map.
Languages of the world. With a cool language map.
When you think about which locales to choose, and which languages to translate in, I always recommend to think of locales as markets, not as languages. That way you focus on the right things when choosing locales. But still, I’m trying to improve my understanding of how to select locales. What are the things you consider when choosing which languages to translate your website in? Leave your thoughts in the comments.
I keep hearing about companies doing a browser based desktop, and I keep thinking “what a bad idea”. It’s just seems like a real misunderstanding of the opportunities and the gaps of the new canvas (the browser).
If browsers were to support OPML as well as RSS, I could click an OPML file, and the way my browser asks me which reader I want to use for an RSS feed, it would do the same for the list of RSS feeds found in the OPML. In other words, we could easily share RSS subscriptions lists. I hope that will happen one day soon. Then I could subscribe to all the Google blogs by clicking 1 link instead of visiting each one and finding the RSS.
If I have memorized a number in English, I can only recall it in English. The same with Dutch. Weird.
What to do with Yahoo? Some smart stuff again from Dave Winer.
“Some analyst told them they needed to gain economy and synergy from
their acquisitions by centralizing and eliminating duplication, but
this makes no sense. Their goal isn’t to economize, the goal is to grow.” Exactly.
“The problem with Yahoo is too many people for too few opportunities.” - nail on the head!
I actually have a different analysis of Yahoo, from an information architecture point of view. The failed 360 experiment they did kid of moved them away from social networking, but they shouldn’t. 360 was too geeky, and missed lots of social network opportunities. It’s time to do it right.
http://paste2.org let’s you copy and paste some code (PHP, HTML, …) and then gives you a short URL to give to people to watch that code. It’s simple and very useful. Posts are retained for up to 30 days since they were last viewed. “Paste2 was created because these days pastebin.com is never working.”
Youtube going global. The process makes sense. First translate the UI (easy). Later make content in different locales specific to that locale (categories, comments, …).
If in Mysql, you get “#1062 - Duplicate entry” error when trying to make a column with lots of data auto-increment, check if there’s a row where that column = 0. If you remove that, it might work again. Not sure why.
Hackday brought people together by letting them do what they enjoy. Similarly, I remember the first two Vloggercons, which, however great they were, were trying to be too much of a tech conference. For videobloggers. Somehow. Pixelodeon on the other hand is a video event for videobloggers, where they can make and watch videos. Makes much more sense.
What did I learn today? When you organize events, don’t try to be like conference X or Y, just let people do what they like to do, but together.
But weirdly for me, if you were looking for the heart of the event. If
you were looking for the absolutely best time that made it all
worthwhile for me, it was overnight. It was the period between nine and
two am where everyone was doing precisely what they wanted to do. Where
the lighting was atmospheric, where the coding was focused and everyone
seemed to flow, where the room was gently buzzing with key-strokes. And
the experience of all of those people turning around to the stage and
running like kids to watch Doctor Who on a huge screen with a hundred
of their peers and friends for one of the most extraordinary
cliff-hanging episodes of the series was just amazing. It was more like
being at home than being at home is.
Now that’s radical: “Store as much data as possible on Amazon Simple Storage System (S3),
NOT in your database and just store the S3 key to the data in your
database. Consider putting any blob or large text fields in S3.”
Would you dare that?
Back home. Hackday was cool. We got struck by lightning. English sandwiches are still soggy though.
My How to make a documentary post continues to rock along.
I redid my website, it doesn’t make sense to have another blog so now it’s a simple static page.
If you say “my photos are on my Flickr, there’s plenty of space there” in Flemish (as I did recently), people may laugh out loud.
http://omg.yahoo.com/ OMG! Cool name, but they messed it up with the yahoo part. But seriously: bad branding decision. It’s like Cherry Coke. I learnt that much about branding, I continue to be surprised that a company like Yahoo gets these basic branding things wrong (overextending the brand). Yahoo doesn’t stand for celebrity news, so why make that part of the brand. They should have gotten OMG.com and created a new brand - now that has potential.
Children as young as seven years old were ‘forcibly disappeared’ by the
CIA, according to report published today jointly by six human rights
groups naming 39 people who are believed to have been held in secret US
custody and whose current whereabouts remain unknown. More
Truly, only in the USA. Really.
That’s easy. And because some blogposts are better as embedded slideshows (I heart slideshare):
To recap:
So with my new ventures, I’m very careful about the marathon I choose to run. And I still do it for the voyage, not for the possible reward at the end.
Donald Norman has grown “sick and tired of hearing people praise
its clean, elegant look.� He’s angry that Google gets credit for being
so simple when all they’re doing is providing a single feature from
their homepage: “Anybody can make a simple-looking interface if the
system only does one thing.�
That’s ridiculous. It is incredibly HARD to make a simple-looking interface, and Google does NOT do 1 thing. Incredibly hard.
Sourceitgood encapsulates some thoughts I have on outsourcing, and a possible future project.
And here’s another one: “Rome had trouble maintaining a distinction between public and private
responsibilities—and between public and private resources. The line
between these is never fixed, anywhere. But when it becomes too hazy,
or fades altogether, central government becomes impossible to steer. It
took a long time to happen, but the fraying connection between imperial
will and concrete action is a big part of What Went Wrong in ancient
Rome. America has in recent years embarked on a privatization binge
like no other in its history, putting into private hands all manner of
activities that once were thought to be public tasks—overseeing the
nation’s highways, patrolling its neighborhoods, inspecting its food,
protecting its borders.”
And lets not forget, privatized prisons.
More proof that the US has definitely lost its “moral leadership” role in the world (which it took on after WW2 and has been abusing ever since). How can they recover from this? I don’t think they can.
Christina has a good set of slideshows on IA’s thinking about designing for socialness. (Was that even *English*?)
Christina on quitting Google: “As I walked off campus, debadged, I started laughing. Laughing loud,
like a crazy person, like joker in the old batman series, laughing and
laughing and laughing. My heart leapt out of my mouth and flew high
above the volleyball court and the cross-current swimming pool. My
heart flew high above the eight cafes with gourmet chefs, and the
Segways and the Japanese toilets. It flew across the bay and into the
sun where it was lit up with joy. I laughed because I had done
something only an idiot would do. I quit a job others would kill for to
do something that didn’t have a chance in a million to survive.”
The more I hear about working at Google, the more it sounds like a kind of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory place.
Facebook is opening up their platform (ie, becoming a platform). I can see the attraction of that huge userbase. I also hear people say that it’s just like a new AOL, a new walled garden. I’m not sure yet, but I think, perhaps, not.
Here’s why.
I remember that, a few years ago, we were working hard on spreading the gospel of videoblogging, and Kenyatta Cheese told me of some workshops he did with teenagers. It turned out that they enjoyed putting videos on social networks (LiveJournal) a lot more than starting their own blogs, and the reason was the feeling of community, the comments they got from their friends. Simple.
Us bloggers had a large discussion about this at the first ever Vloggercon, where we felt that it’s much more important to have control over your own blog, and why would you want to put your soul on some social network owned by BigCo, and we need to teach these teenagers what’s important. Old farts! So that’s a huge cultural gap there (some people say it might be as large as the cultural gap between parents and kids in the 50s-60s), that continues to play in these type of comments on Facebook’s strategy being old-school.
The second reason, and this remains to be proven, is that facebook seems much smarter about being “open”. They let their own apps compete with provider apps. That means a healthy ecosystem can grow, and be it that crucial data is being controlled by 1 entity, it will be successful.
Of course, I still open some kind of open, distributed social networking thing will come next. It almost has to, you would think. So in that sense, yes, the Facebook stage is only an intermediate step. But it will still be big, because that next step in the evolution hasn’t taken off yet.
Just some morning thoughts :)
I haven’t analyzed this in depth, but there is some stuff wrong with the new Technorati. They seem to continue having their identity crisis: what is technorati, anyway? Everytime a company launches one of these alternative homepages I think: identity crisis! Focus guys!
They did get one important thing mostly right with this new relaunch: instead of having 4 or 5 different search domains and having the user (that’s me) choose, they now try to integrate these into one search. So you don’t have to choose anymore between searching tags and text, for example. Mostly.
Their homepage (as homepages tend to do) illustrates their identity crisis: (and what’s up with that *ticker*? Jeez.)
Technorati needs to figure out if they are a search engine, a search feature, a social network or what. And most importantly, they need to show this in the UI. Right now, there’s no differentiation. They have a great brand, but what they stand for (”blog search”) gets diluted and diluted by their wavering around their features and their UI.
And why the hell is their main UI feature (the search box) hidden in that top right corner? Why do video thumbs look the same as site thumbs, so I have to read some (vertical! white on blue!) text to know the difference? I can go on, their search results display needs some loving too.
Is it my morning coffee speaking, or do you feel the same?